Market Snapshot

U.S. stocks trade off the worst levels of the session in Thursday afternoon trade as gains in industrials and consumer-discretionary shares help trim an earlier slump, which came after President Donald Trump called off a June summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, citing “open hostility” from the isolated nation.

U.S. stocks rebound to close higher Wednesday, after the minutes from the Federal Reserve’s May 2 meeting showed policy makers’ support for a June rate increase and calm attitude about inflation outlook.

U.S. stocks closed lower Tuesday, with major indexes turning decisively negative in afternoon trading and ending near their lows of the day as uncertainty over trade policy and other geopolitical issues remained high.

The Dow industrials reclaim footing above a psychologically significant level at 25,000 and the S&P 500 finished at in a roughly nine-week high as investors applaud easing trade animosities between the U.S. and China.

The U.S. dollar has been on a nearly unstoppable uptrend since the start of the second quarter, rising in tandem with government bond yields, while equities got the short end of the stick. Now investors wonder if the buoyant buck will derail earnings growth.

U.S. stocks closed mostly lower on Friday, with major indexes posting a weekly decline as investors grappled with lingering uncertainty over trade negotiations between the U.S. and China, as well as bond yields that climbed this week to the highest level since 2011.

U.S. stocks fall firmly on Tuesday, with a lengthy winning streak for the Dow coming to an end as a benchmark government bond yield jumps to a multiyear high, challenging appetite for equities compared with climbing rates for risk-free bonds.

U.S. stock benchmarks finish higher on Monday, but well off the peak of the day, as energy shares pulled back following a late-afternoon tweet from President Donald Trump indicated that a decision was imminent on whether the U.S. would decertify a 2015 Iran nuclear pact.

With the Federal Reserve meeting, monthly jobs report and the bulk of the earnings season behind us, U.S. equity investors will have no choice but to turn their focus back to global trade headlines in coming weeks.

U.S. stocks log sharp gains Friday, with major indexes shaking off an early slide as technology stocks—notably Apple Inc.—rallied, overshadowing uncertainty over tense trade talks between the U.S. and China and a weaker-than-expected rise in April payrolls.

U.S. stock benchmarks on Thursday end off their lows, and the Dow erases a triple-digit, intraday drop to end higher, in choppy action as investors awaited a key reading of monthly employment on Friday.

It was just three months ago that stock-market investors were being swept up by a euphoria pinned to the idea of economic expansion taking hold harmoniously across the globe, a dynamic that hadn’t occurred since the 1980s, and one that was expected to extend into 2018.

U.S. stocks on Wednesday close lower, after initially edging slightly higher, as the Federal Reserve acknowledged rising prices and said it now expects inflation to “run near” its 2% target “over the medium term,” in its most recent policy statement.

U.S. stocks closed mostly higher on Tuesday, as a sharp rally in technology stocks helped the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq shake off an early decline. However, the Dow fell for a third straight session as caution remained high ahead amid a Federal Reserve policy meeting and fresh developments in global trade.

The Dow and S&P 500 ended a volatile session slightly higher on Wednesday, with the two market gauges erasing early losses to turn positive in afternoon trading as strong corporate earnings appeared to overshadow an ongoing rise in bond yields.

Government bond yields climbing and a shrinking gap between short-term and long-term Treasury rates have prompted some consternation on Wall Street, driving equity prices lower as investors fret about what these dynamics mean for U.S. economic growth as it enters its ninth year of expansion.

U.S. stocks extend losses in late trade to end lower on Friday, as weakness in technology and consumer staples shares offset the latest batch of corporate earnings, which largely continued to beat expectations.

U.S. stocks rally on Tuesday, with major indexes closing at the highest levels in about a month as the latest round of corporate earnings supported the thesis that valuations were supported by economic activity.

U.S. stocks surge Tuesday afternoon, rallying in a broad advance as comments by Chinese President Xi Jinping suggested a less-aggressive stance with respect to trade, which helped to ease concerns about an escalating conflict between the country and the U.S.

U.S. stocks pare most of the gains in the final minutes of trading, closing only slightly higher on Monday following news reports that the Federal Bureau of Investigations raided the office of Michael Cohen, President Trump’s personal lawyer.

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